I also have an old 7 iron in my living room, and a window that works decently as a mirror at night, so when the kids are upstairs in bed I'll do slow motion swings, or poses, right there in the living room. One of my drills involves half swings, so I can actually do that one in the living room too - obviously without balls though. I do that for short little spurts. Maybe 5 or 10 minutes at a time, sometimes a few times a night, sometimes not for a few nights.

Does your wife shake her head and call you a dork when she walks by? Mine does all the time.

And I (who notoriously never changes anything) set about to change the shaft position at P5, to look more like the rest of the golfing world, at the 1st of November. 1,000s and 1,000s of slow motion swings and drills trying to make that plane feel and become the new "natural". Day after day and night after night.

Have to say that part worked. Then when the weather got better and I started playing I had to start fighting through growing pains that were fairly inevitable with such a difference.

Admittedly there have been times that the growing pains made me mad enough that if "going back" to my old way was a viable option I would have done it. Problem was that the new normal also made that hard to do, so the best choice was to continue forward.

How well I'll play with the new diagonal swing path: Too early to say.

So far: I hit short irons better than I ever have. Hit driver about the same. Fairway woods quite a bit worse worse (surprisingly). And long irons slightly worse.

Scores: Slightly higher but mostly because of course and weather conditions.

Future: I think I can play decently while I work through these kinks and setbacks (like "feeling" like the clubface is travelling out to in when in fact it is even more in to out than it used to be) as long as I continue to hit fairways with my driver and hit short irons well.

Funny, this is my "secondary" priority piece. At A4.1 my swing steepens when it needs to shallow. I get the club pointing well inside the ball at A5 when it should be pointing at or even slightly outside the ball. This has been even more frustrating because it's super easy to do in poses and slow motion swings, but as soon as a ball is there I revert.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ernest Jones

Does your wife shake her head and call you a dork when she walks by? Mine does all the time.

No doubt. She also adds in the eye roll when she sees that I have some random European Tour event on in the background, sees Rory or Ian Poulter or somebody else she recognizes and asks who's winning, and then I tell her it's last years event.

Does your wife shake her head and call you a dork when she walks by? Mine does all the time.

Nah, my daughter does that to me.

When I was into skiing, I practiced with my skis, boots and shorts. I suspended myself between saw horses and jumped back and forth between them to build up my hopping skills for moguls. Now that was dorky.

Funny, this is my "secondary" priority piece. At A4.1 my swing steepens when it needs to shallow. I get the club pointing well inside the ball at A5 when it should be pointing at or even slightly outside the ball. This has been even more frustrating because it's super easy to do in poses and slow motion swings, but as soon as a ball is there I revert.

No doubt. She also adds in the eye roll when she sees that I have some random European Tour event on in the background, sees Rory or Ian Poulter or somebody else she recognizes and asks who's winning, and then I tell her it's last years event.

Lol. I watched the final round of the Masters twice. Two days in a row, back to back. She couldn't believe it.

Nah ... I'm pretty sure that if you put on your entire ski outfit with pants and jacket in the living room of a house in Pasadena in summer, that would qualify as a lot more dorky than bermuda shorts.

My wife doesn't think I'm "dorky" for practicing in the living room 8 to 10 hours a day but she does think I'm a moron for constantly (accidently) hitting the ceiling with my follow through.

Of course I do agree with her because I am going to have to fix the ceiling at some point...but right now my golf swing is much more important than my ceiling.

(Plus she vacuums up the paint chips on the floor everyday so no problem).

I hit our ceiling fan in my living room when my wife was on vacation. I broke one of the glass pieces that surrounds a bulb. I picked one up from the local electrical store. It did not match exactly, but it has been close to 5 years, and she has not noticed yet.

I was forced out of the house after my "incident", and built up a 10'x10'x10' shaded structure outside to practice. Much cheaper than repairing the ceiling multiple times.

I have a barn I can practice in, and I do. I also have an outside net to hit into, which I do. Neither let me practice the entire time I am watching TV like the living room allows.

Quote:

Originally Posted by 14ledo81

I hit our ceiling fan in my living room when my wife was on vacation. I broke one of the glass pieces that surrounds a bulb. I picked one up from the local electrical store. It did not match exactly, but it has been close to 5 years, and she has not noticed yet.

Wiped mine out too. I suppose I'll fix it at the same time I fix the ceiling close to it.

Who would have thought that slow motion swings could do so much damage?

I do practice and I'm not saying I expect to get better over night. Nobody on here can say they don't get frustrated at a bad round. I had a bad round. I got frustrated. That's it. Anywho. I'll be at the Norman course for a round tomorrow and hitting the range before. I just hope to best my last score there which was a 92.

I do practice and I'm not saying I expect to get better over night. Nobody on here can say they don't get frustrated at a bad round. I had a bad round. I got frustrated. That's it. Anywho. I'll be at the Norman course for a round tomorrow and hitting the range before. I just hope to best my last score there which was a 92.

You get frustrated easily. Mostly because you see yourself as a better golfer than you are.